Help

No account yet?
Registering is free, easy, and private.
Discuss in the forum, contribute to the Encyclopedia, build your own MyAnime lists, and more.

This Week in Games

Tokyo Twilight Ghost Hunters Daybreak

by Dustin Bailey, Sep 22nd 2016

The Tokyo Game Show took place over the past weekend, and like most recent years for the show, it didn't provide a ton of huge announcements. That's generally reflective of the past decade of AAA Japanese development, which has obviously gotten much smaller. That's not necessarily a bad thing, though, as digital distribution has meant that making—and localizing—niche titles is far more reasonable an endeavor. With that in mind, the lineup of trailers and announcements actually seemed pretty healthy.

The few big things there looked pretty cool, too! I've never been a huge Final Fantasy guy, but I'm kind of in love with everything they've shown of FFXV so far. And yo, that Yakuza 6 stuff looks dope. Shark punching! Ukulele playing! Infant saving! I've been playing through Yakuza 5 recently, and the degree to which Kazuma has become a superheroic boy scout is hilarious. The Dragon of Dojima has a sidequest in that game where you have to collect money to buy Christmas presents for the kids back home at the orphanage he runs. Then, of course, it's time to knock the teeth out of more gang members. You should play Yakuza.

I've also been playing a bit of Tokyo Twilight Ghost Hunters Daybreak: Special Gigs!, which just released this week on PS4, PS3, and Vita. Daybreak: Special Gigs! is a revised and expanded version of last year's game, featuring an additional scenario, expanded story, and improvements to the battle system. I'm not familiar with the original release, but even without an appreciation for those changes I'm digging what this thing has to offer.

You're a high school student turned ghost hunter, interacting with fellow exorcists by day and trapping ghosts by night. The game dips heavily into 70s retro-chic aesthetics, with old cars and lots of references to classic rock songs, which oddly feels inspired by the US TV show Supernatural. Half of Tokyo Twilight is a visual novel, and it's one with a fair bit of production value. Character portraits sway and move to communicate actions, giving a bit more animation to otherwise static scenes.

The other half is an abstracted, turn-based strategy thing where you actually do your ghost hunting work. You monitor a map of a haunted location, placing traps and detection devices to control ghost movement, then maneuver your team of exorcists to dispatch the specters. Ghost movement resolves before your attacks do, meaning that your strategy is all about predicting where the phantoms will go and covering potential escape routes.

It's an interesting system, but I haven't dug in deep enough just yet to see the full limits of where it goes. Depending on the complexity of later scenarios it could turn either very fun or very frustrating as you manage the AP of your squad and chase slippery phantasms around the map. Your team levels up as they exorcise, and you can equip them with new weapons and items between ghost-hunting sessions. It's as much RPG as VN.

The cast has been pretty fun so far, though your method of interacting with them is poorly explained. Any time you're prompted for a response, a disc pops up with five icons representing emotions. Pick one, and a second disc appears with five senses. When you meet a new character, “friendly” and “touch” is a pretty obvious way to shake hands. But what do you do when you're asked to join a club? “Curious” “sight”? “Angry” “smell”? And sadly, all my “romantic” “taste” attempts have been rejected.

Despite—or maybe because of—that weirdness, I've enjoyed my time with Tokyo Twilight Ghost Hunters, and I'll likely stick with it for at least a bit longer. It's an interesting blend of visual novel and strategy-RPG.

NEWS

THE POKEMON ARE COMING TO THE NX
You know what TGS didn't bring? Any announcements regarding Nintendo's next console. Even when TGS was huge Nintendo never had a real presence there, but that didn't stop certain corners of the internet from wondering if an announcement regarding the NX might come. (It didn't.)

We did get a bit of NX detail this week, albeit from a non-gaming source. The Wall Street Journal had an interview with the head of the Pokémon Company, Tsunekazu Ishihara, where the chief of Pikachu said “the NX is trying to change the concept of what it means to be a home console device or a handheld device.” The Pokémon Company isn't part of Nintendo proper, as overly eager investors learned following the explosion of Pokémon Go earlier this year, but the close relationship between the two entities means that this is the closest thing we've had to an official announcement about the nature of the NX. Hey, guess what? The NX will be a portable/home console hybrid.

Ishihara also said “We will make games for the NX.” That's no shocker, but given what the NX will be it does mean that we'll likely see a “real” Pokémon for the first time on a home console, which is something I've been dreaming about since 1998.

METAL GEAR SURVIVE CONTINUES TO EXIST, CONTINUES TO HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH KOJIMAMetal Gear Survive may be ditching a lot things that made the series great, but it's not getting rid of the lengthy gameplay demos that made up so much of MGS5's marketing. A 16-minute video made its way out of TGS—complete with English subtitles—and if I'm totally removing myself from the baggage of that game, it looks pretty neat. MGS5 dropped a lot of the storytelling that made Metal Gear, well, Metal Gear, but it still managed to be one of the finest 3rd-person action games ever created, with perfect controls and some incredibly fine open-world gameplay systems.

Survive builds on those excellent systems. It won't be terrible. It won't be Metal Gear, but it won't be terrible. Kojima himself took a break from making vaguely erotic comments about Norman Reedus to address the game at a Q&A session, where he made it very clear that he had nothing to do with Survive. After all, it doesn't have espionage, political fiction, or a bipedal robot!

Metal Gear has been full of bizarre nonsense from the very start, with everything from ghosts to bisexual vampires to a woman who breathes through nudity. One thing it's managed to avoid so far, however, is cribbing from stream-friendly survival games in an effort to draw in new players by simply imitating what's popular on social media. I'm not saying that's what Metal Gear Survive is doing, but that's totally what it's doing.

HERE'S A LOOK AT THE LIFE OF A NINTENDO GAMEPLAY COUNSELOR
It's time for my favorite bit: the historical curiosity of the week! I'm not quite old enough to remember the days before GameFAQs, but one of the fascinating curiosities of flipping through old Nintendo Power issues and early NES marketing is the hotline to Nintendo's Game Counselors. You couldn't just Google how to get past that boss, and instead had to pick up a phone to find the answers to your gaming questions. Truly, our past was a nightmare.

Some documents from the Game Counselors' office recently found their way into the possession of prolific retro gaming Youtuber MetalJesusRocks. The most interesting bit is a massive tome featuring hand-drawn and annotated maps for games ranging from the Adventure of Link to Willow. Have a look, it's a fun thing.

NEXT WEEK'S RELEASES

You're likely to know the developer and publisher, Inti Creates, as the studio behind Mega Man Zero, and that pedigree should give a pretty good idea of what Azure Striker Gunvolt is—a 2D action-platformer with a whole lot of robotic enemies to shoot. Our hero, Gunvolt, tags enemies with his bullets, causing his lightning powers to home in and take out the bad guys.

This sequel features the playable return of Gunvolt's rival, Copen, who specializes in midair dashes that allow homing missiles to lock onto enemies. Hot tip for you physical collectors: a retail edition featuring both the first and second games will be released on October 4th.

Yep, that's “River City” as in River City Ransom, the RPG-ish brawler on the original NES. We've occasionally gotten titles from the Kunio-kun series in the West, localized into such varied things as Crash ‘n’ the Boys, the Game Boy version of Double Dragon II, and the arcade slash NES brawler Renegade.

Tokyo Rumble is actually a loose remake of the game we know as Renegade, featuring a similar setting and bosses, though greatly expanded with more RPG elements and a wider world. This is primarily a digital release, but a limited physical edition is coming as well. I think. I can't actually find any place that's taking preorders for it.

I really want to just leave this description as “it's another Sonic game,” but I'm afraid that might leave a little too much room for optimism. This is part of the Sonic Boom sub-franchise, which spawned such incredible hits as the abysmal Wii U exclusive, Rise of Lyric, a game so terrible that it lowered the bar for modern Sonic the Hedgehog games.

Sonic Boom: Fire & Ice comes from the same studio that made Sonic Boom: Shattered Crystal, a game not quite so terrible as Rise of Lyric, but still one that nobody likes. Nobody. I haven't played Fire & Ice. It could be great. But that's not very likely.

Sonic Mania will be out next year.

ALSO AVAILABLE:
Sports men (and I think sports women now too) will do sports things in FIFA 17! I kid, I kid. In all seriousness, the new story mode stuff looks cool, and folks more knowledgeable about soccer than I are pretty positive about this year's features. I'm personally a bit more interested in Forza Horizon 3, which has been getting excellent reviews ahead of its release.

If you like turn-based strategy and don't have a gaming PC, you should absolutely check out XCOM 2 when it releases on September 27th. The Dead Rising 2 remaster is already available digitally, but you can grab a physical copy on the 27th as well.

Fans of the new Gegege no Kitaro reboot should be sure to check out this fascinating volume of stories that inspired many of the remake's best episodes. Rebecca Silverman has the details.― While a new volume of Drawn&Quarterly's curated collection of stories from Shigeru Mizuki's GeGeGe no Kitaro series is always interesting, this particular book, Kitaro's Yokai Battles, may be of particular interes...

OTAQUEST LIVE is returning to Los Angeles on July 3, and some of Japan's biggest names in music are coming along for the ride!― OTAQUEST LIVE is returning to Los Angeles on July 3, 2019 and some of Japan's biggest names in music are coming along for the ride! This one-night-only event highlights a stacked lineup the likes of which won't be found anywhere in the world, not even in Japan! You won't w...

Heidi takes a deeper look at the latest Attack on Titan game - plus George RR Martin's Dark Souls, shooter news, and much more!― Sometimes you have a week that's just bursting with big news about big games, and other weeks you have a lot of news that, while interesting, doesn't particularly lend itself well to extended discussion. This week, we've got a lot of the latter: there's cool news and rumor...

Netflix delivers another CG mecha action series this season with Revisions. Nick and Andy find out if this time-warping sci fi adventure is worth checking out.― Netflix delivers another CG mecha action series this season with Revisions. This week, Nick and Andy find out if this time-warping sci fi adventure is worth checking out. Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in t...

This controversial mecha series from A-1 Pictures and Studio Trigger has finally arrived in a special edition loaded with extras. Theron Martin has the details in our full review.― This 24-episode original anime production debuted in the winter 2018 and quickly became one of the most controversial titles of the last couple years. In this case, the controversy was not over blatantly objectionable con...

In a country with famously strict gun laws, how exactly does hunting for sport work? Justin digs in.― Sarah asked: A few months ago I was watching Flying Witch and it had a gag where the uncle sees a pheasant and tries to catch it with his bare hands. Originally I thought getting a gun would be a lot quicker, but then I remembered Japanese gun laws are much stricter. I was wondering if there is a d...

Dates, cities, and more information revealed!― In 2018, to commemorate the release of Dragon Ball Super: BROLY, the ground-breaking “DRAGON BALL NORTH AMERICA TOUR” visited seven cities across the United States and Canada. Featuring a life-sized replica of the “World Martial Arts Tournament” (“Tenkaichi Budokai”), the booth appeared in the news as North America was engulfed in Dragon Ball fever. Bu...

Be careful what you wish for, because this short series proves that having all your favorite waifu figurines come to life might not be a dream come true. Micchy and Steve dive headfirst into some truly amazing trash.― Be careful what you wish for, because Amazing Stranger proves that having all your favorite waifu figurines come to life might not be a dream come true. This week, Micchy and Steve di...

This second film adapts Made in Abyss' most devastating material to beautiful effect while setting up new details for a continuation. Theron Martin has the details in our full review.― Wandering Twilight, the compilation film that covers episodes 9-13 of the Made in Abyss TV series, had its U.S. debut at Anime Central, complete with the attendance of director Masayuki Kojima, music director Kevin Pe...